Eight persons were nailed to the crosses, to re-enact Jesus Christ’s suffering in a gory Good Friday tradition that draws thousands of devotees and tourists to the Philippines despite being rejected by the Catholic Church.
The real-life crucifixions in the farming village of San Pedro Cutud in Pampanga province, North of Manila, resumed after a three-year pause due to the coronavirus pandemic.
About a dozen villagers registered but only eight men participated, including a 62-year-old sign painter Ruben Enaje, who was nailed to a wooden cross for the 34th time in San Pedro Cutud.
In a news conference shortly after his brief mock crucifixion, Enaje said he prayed for the eradication of the COVID-19 virus and the end of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has contributed to gas and food prices soaring worldwide.
“It’s just these two countries involved in that war, Russia and Ukraine, but all of us are being affected,” said Enaje, who appeared to be well and showed his two bandaged hands to journalists.
The father of four said he wanted to end his extraordinary penitence because of his age but would decide with finality before Lent next year.
While the pain from the nailing was not as intense as anticipated, he said he always felt edgy before each crucifixion.
“To be honest, I always feel nervous because I could end up dead on the cross,” he said before Friday’s nailing.
“When I’m laid down on the cross, my body begins to feel cold,” he said.
“When my hands are tied, I just close my eyes and tell myself, ‘I can do this. I can do this.”
Surviving nearly unscathed when he fell from a three-storey building in 1985 prompted Enaje to undergo the ordeal as thanksgiving for what he considered a miracle.
He extended the ritual after loved ones recovered from serious illnesses, one after another, turning him into a village celebrity as the “Christ” in the Lenten reenactment of the Way of the Cross.